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Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons™
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Articles 1 - 5 of 5
Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences
A Signal Detection Model For The Analysis Of Continuous Response Gradients And An Application To Confidence Rating Data, Fabian A. Soto
A Signal Detection Model For The Analysis Of Continuous Response Gradients And An Application To Confidence Rating Data, Fabian A. Soto
MODVIS Workshop
see attached
An Observer Model Version Of General Recognition Theory, Fabian Soto Phd
An Observer Model Version Of General Recognition Theory, Fabian Soto Phd
MODVIS Workshop
No abstract provided.
Linking Signal Detection Theory And Encoding Models To Reveal Independent Neural Representations From Neuroimaging Data, Fabian A. Soto
Linking Signal Detection Theory And Encoding Models To Reveal Independent Neural Representations From Neuroimaging Data, Fabian A. Soto
MODVIS Workshop
No abstract provided.
A Signal Detection Experiment With Limited Number Of Trials, Tadamasa Sawada
A Signal Detection Experiment With Limited Number Of Trials, Tadamasa Sawada
MODVIS Workshop
Signal detection theory has been well accepted in vision science to measure human sensitivity to stimuli in a Psychophysical experiment. The theory is formulated so that the measured sensitivity is independent from a response bias (criterion). The formulation is based on an assumption that number of trials in the experiment is infinite but this assumption cannot be satisfied in practice. The assumption came from two normal distributions used in the formulation. The distributions respectively represent a set of signal trial and that of noise trials in the experiment. In this study, I will show how the violation of the assumption …
Metacognition: Using Confidence Ratings For Type 2 And Type 1 Roc Curves, S A. Klein
Metacognition: Using Confidence Ratings For Type 2 And Type 1 Roc Curves, S A. Klein
MODVIS Workshop
In the past five years there has been a surge of renewed interest in metacognition ("thinking about thinking"). The typical experiment involves a binary judgment followed by a multilevel confidence rating. It is a confusing topic because the rating could be made either on one's confidence in the binary response (standard rating Type 1 ROC) or on one's confidence sorted by whether the response was correct (Type 2 ROC). Both are metacognition. After a few remarks on challenging aspects of the Type 2 approach, I will present some interesting results for Type 1 ROC for both memory and vision research. …